The use of physical interventions for people with learning disabilities must be within a locally agreed policy framework and as a last resort. Commissioners of services need to be assured that their use is appropriate and that good quality monitoring is taking place.

The researchers in this study looked at the work of good practice multi-disciplinary panel which is now in operation in east Lancashire. The panel was set up to provide support and governance to service providers involved in physical interventions in the people they support.

The researchers carried out an audit into the experiences of the professionals on that panel, through semi structured interviews with six members. The data were analysed using thematic analysis.
They found four main themes:

The impact of the panel on participants’ own work

The impact on clients and providers

The value of the multi-disciplinary experience

The obstacles encountered alongside ideas for future development.

The researchers make some suggestions for the future of such governance arrangements, both in terms of the impact on individuals and in relation to broader service development.

After qualifying as a social worker, John worked in community learning disability teams before getting involved in a number of long-stay hospital closure programmes, working to develop individual plans for people moving into their own homes. He worked for BILD, helping to develop the Quality Network and was editorial lead for the NHS electronic library learning disabilities specialist collection. This led him to found the Learning Disabilities Elf site with Andre Tomlin as a way of making the evidence accessible to practitioners in health and social care. Most recently he has worked as part of Mencap's national quality team and also been involved in a number of national website developments, including the General Medical Council's learning disabilities site.

I would be really interested in Viewing this artilce as I am involved in reviewing PI use in our service. Unfortunately I can’t get hold of the positive behaviour journal but I am looking at subscribing to it.

If you work for an organisation that has a library or still have a public library that does this you can order the article on Inter-library loan. The British Library Document Supply Centre which is the central resource for this service has this journal in it’s collection. There will be a fee to pay but it will much less than buying the article from the publisher or taking out a subscription to the journal.